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A&A 383, 1067-1075 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20011829
Towards explanation of pulsar radio spectra
S. A. PetrovaInstitute of Radio Astronomy, Chervonopraporna St. 4, 61002 Kharkov, Ukraine
(Received 15 June 2001 / Accepted 11 December 2001 )
Abstract
Refraction of radio waves in the ultrarelativistic highly magnetized
pulsar plasma is considered. The influence of the effect on the
observed pulsar spectra is studied. It is shown that refraction can cause
a marked redistribution of the intensity in the emission beam. For a given
sight-line trajectory across the beam this affects not only the apparent
profile morphology but also the total intensity detected. As refraction is
frequency-dependent, it can modify the pulsar spectrum. The spectral changes
are peculiar to both the core and conal components. For the typical
parameters of the magnetospheric plasma the effect is found to be efficient
at the frequencies above 1 GHz. It is demonstrated that refraction can lead
to the high-frequency steepening of the core-component spectrum with the
subsequent flattening at still higher frequencies. In addition,
the effect can account for the inversion of the intensity ratio of the conal components
and the consequent break in the spectra of the conal-double pulsars.
The high-frequency
features of the pulsar spectra are compared with the other
observational consequences of refraction.
The conclusion is made that at the frequencies above
1 GHz the properties of pulsar radiation are mainly determined by
the propagation effects in the magnetospheric plasma.
Key words: plasmas -- waves -- pulsars: general
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2002
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